Transitions
in sentence
278 examples of Transitions in a sentence
Yet, even as central banks face important transitions, the choices of their new leaders have reflected a desire for continuity.
Albania, Mongolia, and India successfully passed more complicated tests – and offer some useful lessons in democratic
transitions
under unfavourable conditions.
In the case of democratic transitions, a success nearby often helps at home.
These
transitions
will be lengthy, rewarding some and forcing difficult adjustments on others, and their productivity effects will not appear in aggregate data for some time.
As a result, even if workers gain stronger support during structural
transitions
(in the form of income support and retraining options), labor-market mismatches are likely to grow, sharpening inequality and contributing to further political and social polarization.
Successful
transitions
from military to civilian rule in Turkey, Spain, and elsewhere partly reflected sustained American and European support.
By substituting imports with domestic production, relying on government planning to target priority sectors, and implementing selective trade protection (for example, by imposing tariffs, quotas, and import licensing), they attempted to accelerate their
transitions
from raw-materials suppliers to manufacturing-based economies.
Since communism's fall, the nations of Central and Eastern Europe have undergone exhilarating yet wrenching
transitions.
He referred to Africa’s failed states and difficult
transitions
to democracy, but also noted that some African countries are making good progress, and have achieved high rates of economic growth.
Without periodic democratic transitions, these countries’ citizens have few ways to effect change.
But not only political and economic
transitions
are wrenching.
In the 1980s and 1990s, these three countries began to open up, and experienced difficult structural
transitions
that nonetheless boosted productivity and provided broad-based benefits to citizens and consumers.
But their
transitions
are faster and less painful, because investments run broadly across their public and private sectors, and across tangible and intangible assets.
East Asia’s Turning PointNEW DELHI – Political
transitions
in East Asia promise to mark a defining moment in the region’s jittery geopolitics.
These political
transitions
could compound East Asia’s challenges, which include the need to institute a regional balance of power and dispense with historical baggage that weighs down interstate relationships, particularly among China, Japan, and South Korea.
Kenya’s bumpy road to democracy is no different from that of many other countries in Africa whose political
transitions
were heralded with high expectations.
The many other Africans who lament their nations’ flagging democratic
transitions
would do well to draw strength from Kenya’s milestone.
Yet both
transitions
still took nearly a decade.
No doubt, then, that the world could compensate for slower growth in US by faster growth abroad, but there is also no doubt that such
transitions
are hard to manage.
But
transitions
are also times of great opportunity.
Security threats are among the most serious setbacks in
transitions.
Both kept their countries calm during wrenching
transitions.
Democratic
transitions
need to be driven by societies that want democracy, and since the latter requires institutions, it is usually a fairly long and drawn out process.
But the democratic
transitions
in Eastern Europe made Fidel Castro wary, so the first opportunity for a similar transition in Cuba was lost.
The risk of political
transitions
that may lead to the victory of Islamist parties is a democratic paradox that Europe and the US must accept if they are to devise inclusive reform policies – in other words, policies that are the polar opposite of the type of democratic imposition practiced in occupied Iraq.
Here, a lengthy process is involved, and its success – exemplified in the post-communist
transitions
in Eastern Europe – depends on key preconditions.
Thus, post-war
transitions
require that policies that encourage dynamism and inclusion go hand in hand.
Moreover, foreign assistance, while stable in “normal” developing countries, often exhibits sharp spikes in countries undergoing war-to-peace
transitions.
A free-for-all in subsidizing exports must be avoided, but there is an urgent need to reform international trade and financing rules to validate and encourage green-growth
transitions.
On the contrary, government has a significant role in structural
transitions.
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